Paradise has some of the strongest evacuation planning in the state when the Camp Fire killed 85

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PARADISE, CA – NOVEMBER 10: Burned cars are seen along Edgewood Lane in Paradise, Calif., on Saturday, Nov. 10, 2018. According to neighbor Gabriel Fallon, people who drove down the dead-end road to see shelter from the Camp Fire did not make it out. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

Note: This is part of a special investigation series “Destined to Burn” analyzing the wildfire crisis California faces. The collaboration includes the Chico Enterprise-Record, Sacramento Bee, USA Today and Associated Press.

PARADISE — Wildfire surrounded Darrel Wilken and the three hospital patients in his car. But instead of evacuating Paradise, they were stuck in traffic, along with thousands of others.

Cars burned in front of them. Trees, homes and buildings exploded into flames as the gusting firestorm destroyed nearly everything around them

Wilken, a nurse, knew about Paradise’s evacuation plan, which includes route maps and zones. But the speed and intensity of the fire forced him to improvise, he said.

Despite the tragic outcome of that day in November 2018 — and the confusion faced by people like Wilken — the city’s careful planning made a difference, Paradise Mayor Jody Jones insists.

“I don’t know that you could ever prepare for something like what happened here. It was just so fast,” Jones said. “But we were not caught flat-footed. We did know what to do. Our people knew what to do, and it did save lives.”

Counter-intuitive as it may sound, Paradise has some of the strongest evacuation planning in California. In fact, a USA TODAY Network-California survey of communities at high risk from wildfire found only 22 percent (including Paradise) have a robust, publicly available evacuation plan.

The scale of disaster in the Camp Fire was unprecedented, but the scene of people fleeing wildfire was familiar, repeated numerous times over the past three years up and down California, from Redding and Paradise to Santa Rosa, Ventura and Malibu.

In many of those communities, motorists became stuck in traffic as officials tried to evacuate thousands onto a few roads leading away from the flames.

No requirement to plan

The 85 deaths and nearly 19,000 buildings destroyed in Paradise’s Camp Fire made it the deadliest and most destructive blaze in California history. Eight of those who perished were found in their vehicles, with two others found outside near vehicles.

Burned-out and abandoned vehicles lined roads through town.

But none of that has created a detectable sense of urgency for more evacuation planning.

Using Cal Fire’s designation of wildfire risks across the state, the USA TODAY Network-California requested evacuation plans from 27 communities at greatest risk of fire.

One group consisted of the 15 most populous communities where 95 percent or more of residents live in very high hazard areas for wildfires. The other group included the 15 places with the highest sheer number of residents living in that riskiest zone. Three communities appeared on both lists.

Reporters contacted officials in each of those 27 communities, and filed document requests under the California Public Records Act with those that refused to release plans.

They found that fewer than one in four have a robust evacuation plan that is available to the public.

California does not require communities to plan for wildfire evacuations. And while experts recommend cities and counties develop evacuation plans, there is disagreement over what should be included in those plans.

Tom Cova is a University of Utah geography professor who has done extensive research on environmental hazards, emergency management, transportation, and geographic information science.

Cova said he doesn’t understand why communities wouldn’t do more evacuation planning.

“To me, it says, one, communities are complacent or ignorant of the risks, and two, it’s a failure on the part of local and state governments to not require them (certainly for the highest hazard communities),” Cova said in an email.

Jones, the Paradise mayor, said other communities around the state in high fire hazard areas should learn a lesson from what happened in her town.

“Have a plan, an evacuation plan,” she said. “You’re going to have tragedy if you don’t have a plan.”

But some emergency officials say fires are too unpredictable for that.

Evacuation areas depend on the fire itself and what areas or neighborhoods it is threatening, said Paul Lowenthal, assistant fire marshal and public information officer for Santa Rosa.

He acknowledged the difficulty of evacuating residents during the Tubbs Fire in October 2017, when between 80,000 and 100,000 residents were evacuated and Highway 101 was clogged.

Lowenthal said evacuation plans may be helpful in communities with few roads in and out. But in communities like Santa Rosa, where there are more options, he believes they aren’t needed.

“Conditions dictate the extent and need for evacuations,” Lowenthal said.

Fire everywhere

Paradise had detailed evacuation plans that had worked in the past, including in 2017, Jones said. The evacuation plan breaks the town into 14 zones. Residents living in each zone evacuate depending on where the fire is located.

Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey looks at a map of the evacuation zones during a press conference March 9, 2017 at the Sheriff’s Office in Oroville. – Bill Husa — Mercury-Register

The plan is mailed to every home in Paradise each year. The community even practiced evacuating, she said.

But the Camp Fire, which broke out the morning of Nov. 8, 2018, was different. Fire was “everywhere” by the time it got to Paradise, Jones said.

“The plan was never for the whole town to evacuate at once, so I’m not sure I would say it went according to plan because the evacuation plan we had was predicated on evacuation by zones in a very orderly manner,” Jones said.

“And the entire town, because of the wind, the embers were coming in everywhere all at once, so we had fires all over town and the entire town was evacuating at one time, which is going to overrun your transportation system.

“I don’t care what town you are, where you live or how big your streets are. They’re not sized to take the entire population at one time,” she said.

City and county officials had planned on having motorists evacuate via the five two-lane roads and one four-lane road leading out of town. But fire forced officials to close three of those routes, further clogging the remaining roads, Jones said.

Still, Jones is convinced the evacuation plan and residents’ familiarity with it saved lives.

“People were aware. In Paradise, you had fire every year. You had evacuations every year, usually by zone. People knew what to do, so that was helpful,” she said.

Without that, she said, the situation would have been even more chaotic.

Wilken, the nurse, said he had been through two previous evacuations in Paradise. Both went more smoothly, but the Camp Fire was different.

“It just happened too quickly. It was a blitzkrieg of fire, and no one was prepared for that,” Wilken said.

Secret plans

When USA TODAY Network-California reporters contacted community leaders and emergency managers around the state, some claimed they do have plans but refused to make them available.

Reporters submitted requests for copies of evacuation plans in March to Los Angeles, El Dorado and San Bernardino counties through the California Public Records Act.

Emily Montanez, a senior program manager with the Los Angeles County Office of Emergency Management, said the evacuation report is not available to the public because it contains sensitive information about the sheriff’s office main station and substations.

Los Angeles County later released a copy of the evacuation plan after it received a public records request for the document.

In San Bernardino County, the sheriff’s and fire departments have developed evacuation plans, but “the information is not public record because of the possibility of someone using that information to hamper evacuations during an emergency,” said Scott Vanhorne, a spokesman for a county supervisor.

However, in response to a USA TODAY Network public records request, county officials two days later provided 851 pages of documents.

While the documents referred to the roles and responsibilities of various agencies during emergency evacuations, they did not include a separate appendix on evacuations.

El Dorado County officials also initially refused to release information about evacuation plans that would cover Pollock Pines, one of the 15 largest communities in the state where more than 95 percent of residents live in a very high hazard zone for wildfire.

“I confirmed with the (lieutenant) for our (emergency services) division that we do not release our emergency plan, for obvious security reasons,” wrote El Dorado County Sheriff’s Sgt. Anthony Prencipe, in an email response. He did not elaborate on those reasons.

Then, in response to a Public Records Act request, the county provided one page from its emergency operations plan that refers to evacuations. Three paragraphs on that page were blacked out.

El Dorado County officials also provided several pages of what it called evacuation plans for the area of Mosquito and Swansboro roads near Placerville, but those consisted mostly of general instructions to residents on how to prepare themselves.

What is an evacuation plan

The detail and quality of evacuation plans vary from community to community across the state.

“One of the more impressive” evacuation plans, according to researcher Cova, was developed by San Diego County and is included as a 76-page appendix to its emergency operations plan.

The evacuation plan is a “regional, 50,000-foot view of evacuation planning” not intended to replace on-the-spot decision making in specific emergencies, said Alex Bell, a spokeswoman for San Diego County.

The county’s evacuation plan was born out of the lessons learned from evacuating New Orleans residents during Hurricane Katrina in 2005, as well as hurricanes Irma and Harvey in 2017.

San Diego’s evacuation plan also contains estimates on the number of residents within communities in the county who may require evacuation assistance, sheltering, transportation and help with pet evacuation.

It provides general evacuation routes and road capacities, countywide shelter capacities, resources available locally and through mutual aid and access considerations for people with disabilities.

There is “all sort of disagreement out there” about what makes a viable evacuation plan, said Tim Haney, professor of sociology and director of the Centre for Community Disaster Research at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta.

• Plans for the vulnerable: low-income, elderly, disabled, those without a vehicle, etc. The plan should note where those populations are concentrated relative to the hazard and what kind of transportation they’ll need.

• A plan for what to do when people don’t hear the evacuation order, don’t trust it or choose not to evacuate. Will uniformed officers knock on doors, and if so how will that be staffed and organized?

• An estimate of the number of people who will need shelter while they are evacuated and where those shelters will be set up. A plan also should identify sources of food, toiletries, etc. Shelter plans should be set up in a way to minimize risk of gendered violence. Shelter plans should also accommodate pets.

• Assurance that emergency social services such as mental health services will be available and evacuees will know how to get those services.

“A successful evacuation is basically a chain of events that must happen smoothly and if any one link in the chain breaks, the plan fails,” Cova said.

A patchwork approach

State law doesn’t require evacuation plans. City and county authorities can decide whether to have one, said Mark Pazin, chief of law enforcement for the California Office of Emergency Services.

“Nothing is mandated, but it’s highly advisable, given the drama we’ve seen up and down the state,” Pazin said.

Nine of the 27 communities surveyed for this story are in Los Angeles County, which has an evacuation plan within its overall emergency operations plan, but those plans aren’t readily available to the public.

Los Angeles County released a copy of its evacuation plan in response to a public records request from the USA Today Network.

The 73-page evacuation plan is part of the county’s Operational Area Emergency Response Plan.

While the plan was not available without a public records request, it begins by addressing the “officials, employees and residents of Los Angeles County.”

Two Los Angeles County communities, Malibu and Topanga Canyon, have individual evacuation plans that are posted on the internet.

Three communities in San Bernardino County — Lake Arrowhead, Crestline and Running Springs — are covered under the agency’s evacuation plan for the mountain communities in an area stretching from Crestline to Big Bear, said Glenn Barley, San Bernardino County unit chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

While evacuation routes are posted online, the complete evacuation plan for Crestline, Running Springs and Lake Arrowhead are not publicly available, Barley said.

Two other communities on the list — Magalia and Paradise — have posted evacuation plans online.

The city of Glendale’s 2008 emergency plan identifies nine brush fire zones in neighborhoods near the mountains.

Each of the zones includes a population figure and notes about narrow roads or remote neighborhoods with restricted access. The plan cautions that such road conditions could lead to problems for emergency responders as well as people evacuating.

“I looked at that and I don’t know if there is a problem. I wouldn’t call that a problem, maybe a concern,” said Dan Bell, a spokesman for the city.

Bell said the city has updated the plans but declined to release those newer documents. He said the plans do not list solutions or steps the city is taking to address road obstacles in the brush fire zones.

While officials in Sonoma, Shasta and Ventura counties evacuated tens of thousands of residents from wildfires over the past three years, those counties also do not have evacuation plans.

‘Concern with that pre-planned stuff’

Kevin McGowan, assistant director of emergency services for Ventura County, said fires are too unpredictable to plan for evacuations: You don’t know where they will start and you don’t know where they’ll go.

“Our concern with that pre-planned stuff is that it doesn’t lend itself to that dynamic decision-making process,” McGowan said.

He said when fires break out firefighters and law enforcement personnel are authorized to make decisions about evacuations quickly based on current conditions.

“We built a culture in Ventura County to evaluate evacuation needs right away,” he said.

Planning out evacuations ahead of time would be very hard to do, he said.

“It’s not something you can just have written and on the shelf and then just pull it out. It doesn’t work that way with wildfires,” McGowan said.

Ventura County officials do evacuation planning for tsunamis, but emergency planners know where a tsunami will come from. Those evacuation plans are available online, McGowan said.

As far as traffic congestion during evacuations, McGowan said evacuation plans aren’t likely to solve that problem.

“Every single one of these really large fires had traffic congestion,” McGowan said. However, it wasn’t gridlock, he said.

“There’s absolutely no evacuation in the history of the world that is going to go absolutely seamless,” McGowan said.

Evacuation plans are helpful for “well-defined hazards” such as a tsunami or dam failure, said Briana Khan, a spokeswoman for Sonoma County.

Wildfire evacuation plans also may help smaller communities but not larger ones, she said. Plus, there’s the cost.

“Most communities in California do not have wildfire evacuation plans due to the need to expend resources in addressing other hazards such as flooding or earthquakes,” Khan said.

However, she said, Sonoma County is interested in developing evacuation planning for its most at-risk communities.

“Although we do not have a definite timeline in place for delivering and exercising these plans, the county is very aware of — and is counting on — the significant community interest in this subject,” Khan said.

Since the 2017 fires, officials also have begun sending out emergency warnings and calling for evacuations earlier, she said.

Haney, the Mt. Royal University researcher, said the success of an evacuation plan rests on several things: effective communication, whether a community trusts its local government, resources available to residents and geography.

The trend among emergency managers is to develop evacuation plans for many different types of disasters — hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, fires, etc. — rather than a single evacuation plan for each, Haney said.

“It’s really about imagining the different scenarios — making plans flexible enough to fit many different disaster types,” Haney said.

“Things that never happened before happen all the time,” he said.

What happened during the Camp Fire in 2018 had happened before, although on a smaller scale, said Jones, the Paradise mayor.

Photo from June 12, 2008, shows evacuation traffic backed up and halted on Pearson Road headed toward Pentz Road in Paradise, as residents flee the Humboldt Fire that destroyed 87 homes. Plans were drafted since the Humboldt Fire to avoid this kind of emergency gridlock, and a drill in 2016 gave several firefighting agencies a chance to practice those plans. – Jason Halley — Enterprise-Record file photo

Because of evacuation problems during a 2008 wildfire, Paradise and county officials drew up evacuation plans that include evacuation zones and routes, she said.

“We had terrible traffic jams (in 2008) and from that we developed an evacuation plan,” Jones said.

But Jones takes away a different lesson than emergency leaders in other parts of California. She doesn’t see the Camp Fire deaths as a sign that planning is futile. Quite the opposite.

“(Eighty-five) deaths is a lot and it’s terrible, but our residents knew what to do,” she said.